Salve



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strnrnnu o. O? DEL L, or person, MICHIGAN.

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To all whom may concern:

Be it known that'I, STEPHEN O. ODnnn, a citizen of the United .States of America,

- residing at Detroit, in the county of \Vayne and State of Michigan, have 'inventedcertain new and useful Improvements in Salves,

' of which the following is a' specification. I

This invention relates to salves' and hias for its object to produce a highly efficient remedy for healing flesh injured by burns,

bruises or cuts, or affected by those diseases or disorders caused by bacterial infection or parasitic invasion.

An incidental ob ect to be achieved by my invention is to utilize the valuable curative properties of certain ingredients while at the same time restraining or preventing deleterious effects which would be produced if the ordinary action of such ingredients were not modified. by the presence of other substances.

The salve contains the following substances .in substantially the proportions given 1 Red precipitate lounce' Carbolic acid ounce Oil of origanum; lounce -Oil of spike 2ounces Rosin 1 ounce. Beeswax; 4 ounces Lard." 8ounces The resin is powdered and melted with the beeswaxand lard. The red precipitate (red mercury monoxid) is reduced to a very fine powder and added to the melted wax, lard and rosin, and the oils and carbolic acid are stirred in until the entire mass. has been thoroughly blended.

The salve thus prepared has a consistency such that it willnot become liquid in ordi nary warm weather, but at the same time,

' it is soft enough-t0 spread readilyjup on a wounded or raw. surfacejofithe skin. ,It s

applied in use over and around the sore or injured place, and in the case of blood I poisoning, it is applied between the injured place and the heart. For example, if a finger develops a case of blood poisoning that begins to extend along the forearm,.a band of this salve applied thickly around the arm will in most cases stop the progress of the infection. 7

This preparation was developedpfimarily as a cure for galls, those sores roduced as abrasions orexcoriations by "sa dIe or har-.

Specification of Letters Patent. Iatented. Aug, 15, .1922. Application filed August 6, 1920. ser al No. 401,664.

'ness on horses. -Any scab that forms in such a sore is rubbed off at once if the horse is worked with the harness or saddle that produced the sore. This salve rendersthe wound sterile so that it heals from the bottom ip even though the surface is made raw each day by the pressure of the collar or other part producing the irritation. Galls have been healed by this salve'on the shoulder of the centerhorse in a gang plow team. "It heals up old sores that have resisted other treatments, such as running sores and indolent ulcers.

The phenol in the commercial carbolic acid used is well known as an antiseptic,

and the oils are also antiseptic as well as tissue-penetrating. The oil of spike not only acts as an antiseptic, but also aids in allaying inflammation and in carrying the phenol and red precipitate into the tissues. Bacteria such as cause suppuration are checked .in their. growth, and the phagocytosis that ordinarily is relatively slow in certain boils and carbuncles is hastened or facilitated in some manner by some of the ingredients of tliispreparation or by the joint action of two or more of them, with the result that boils, carbuncles, and felons are quickly aborted or brought to a head. The eflicacy of resin in ointm'ents 'for the treatment of the peculiar inflammation resulting from a burn or scald has long been known, and the present salve has all the valued qualities of the old ceratum resinae of the U. S. P. in addition toits antiseptic qualities.

The fungus parasite causing ringworm appears to be inhibited in its growth by some one or more of the ingredients of this ped from the U. S. P. in its ninth revision,

this being an indication that the preparation was considered inferior to others, the similar ointment in which the yellow oxide is used being substituted therefor. But this old red precipitate ointment did not have the compositionor-"the properties of my present preparation. It consisted of red oxide 10 parts; water, 10 parts; hydrous wool-fat, 40 parts; and petrolatuin, 40 parts,

render them useless in many cases.

the last ingredient being one that is common in ointments, but which would practically carefully This preparation has been Worked out by a long series of tests and experiments, and the present proportions are not the result of chance or guess-work. This is not a doctors prescription or a theoretical formula, but is the tried and approved result of actual experience.-

.I claim: I

1. An ointment comprising in combination, carbolie acid, red oxid of mercury, oil of spike, and oil of origanum.

'2: An ointment comprising in combina- 

